The South Waterfront District and the Portland Aerial Tram How infrastructure investment can catalyze redevelopment and remove barriers to healthy lifestyles
Role of transportation infrastructure in creating healthy communities Removing barriers and making connections Creating a physical environment that supports healthy communities - Allow people to make healthy decisions effortlessly Coordinated investment builds on existing and planned infrastructure to create an expanding network - Results multiply
South Waterfront District Oregon Health & Science University Campus PSU and Downtown Portland South Waterfront District
South Waterfront District Steel salvage and ship dismantling 1966 Timber and industrial development 1939 Ship dismantling 1970
South Waterfront District A void is open space where opportunity lies
South Waterfront District The Vision: To create a Science and Technology Quarter by partnering with: PSU OHSU OMSI S. Waterfront District
South Waterfront District Central District- 5,000 jobs and 2,700 housing units At Build Out- 10,000 jobs and 5,000 housing units World class academic and research partnerships Urban District where residents and employees can utilize the district s transit service and proximity to downtown in making their transportation decisions
South Waterfront District Land Use Office, Institutional, Bio-Science Emphasis Institutional Emphasis Residential Emphasis Retail Emphasis Transitional Emphasis
South Waterfront Phase 1 Financing Mix of public and private investment projected to total over $2 billion at build-out. Early investment in infrastructure primes the South Waterfront District for redevelopment. Phase 1 investments through 2008 include: $440 million in private investment in direct new building development $122 million in public projects (financed by public & private sources) $70 million in public sources (including $30.8 million of Tax Increment Financing) $52 million in private sources (including local improvement district funds) City Responsible for: Street Infrastructure Streetcar Tram Parks and Greenway
South Waterfront District Transportation Infrastructure Establish street grid Transit Streetcar Bus Tram Pedestrian and Bike Connections Greenway Trail Gibbs Street Pedestrian Bridge
South Waterfront District Open Space Infrastructure 100 min. Greenway 150 Greenway Goal Neighborhood Parks River Presence
Connecting OHSU to South Waterfront
OHSU/Marquam Hill Plan Constrained Campus - topography, heavy traffic 1996 - OHSU began research into North Macadam Expansion Considered suburban expansion to OGI campus Needed fast and reliable link to South Waterfront
South Waterfront and OHSU How to make the Link?
Barriers to accessing OHSU Campus Limited road infrastructure 400-500 feet of elevation gain
Connection Options Considered Options Considered: Funicular rail
Connection Options Considered Options Considered: Streetcar
Connection Options Considered Options Considered: Tram Gondola
Connection Options Considered Options Considered: Shuttle Bus
Connection Options Considered Options Considered: People mover
Connection Options Considered Connection Study undertaken by OHSU to explore linking two campuses Options Considered: Funicular rail Streetcar Tram Gondola Bus People mover Trams and other aerial ropeways are the best solution when physical barriers make other transportation solutions infeasible
Recommended Alternative: Aerial Tram Transportation Capacity 900 people per hour per direction capacity. Shuttle bus option only has capacity for 180 passengers per hour. Travel Time 200 seconds regardless of surface traffic conditions. Neighborhood Livability- lowest level of impact on the adjacent neighborhood due to lack of structures, noise and reduced number and frequency of vehicles required. Maintenance Considerations Tram technology is the most reliable and mechanically simple of aerial technology. Development Impacts An effective aerial system provides the economic spark for the South Waterfront District spurring redevelopment.
Creating Convenient Connections PSU and Downtown OHSU Campus South Waterfront District
About the Portland Aerial Tram
Bicable Aerial Tram 2 Stationary track ropes per side
Bicable Aerial Tram 2 Stationary track ropes per side 1 Circulating haul rope
Bicable Aerial Tram 2 Stationary track ropes per side 1 Circulating haul rope 2 Cabins, 80 passengers each Jig Back operation 12 Ton cabins
Bicable Aerial Tram 2 Stationary track ropes per side 1 Circulating haul rope 2 Cabins, 80 passengers each Jig Back operation 12 Ton cabins 1,000,000 lbs. of force in tension
Value Engineering Option - 1
Value Engineering Option - 2
Upper Station - October 2006
Completed Tower
Cabin arriving at Upper Terminal
Lower Station Entrance - February 2007
Making the Bicycle Connection Tram connects OHSU to waterfront trails and city bikeway network
Making the Bicycle Connection Bike facilities South Waterfront 25 spaces at the Tram Lower Station 83 spaces in the New OHSU Center for Health and Healing OHSU Marquam Hill Campus 420 bike racks, 32 bike lockers
Making the Bicycle Connection Bike Commuter Punch Cards $50 per 35 punches Receive 100 punched cards every 2 weeks
OHSU March Wellness Center Located in New OHSU Building at the Tram Lower Station Many dimensions of wellness physical, emotional, intellectual, spiritual, financial, social and creative Facilities Pools, Gymnasium, Cardio fitness & strength training, Group class spaces Teaching kitchen, Life design center, Day spa Enrichment Courses Financial health seminars Foreign language conversation groups Living simple discussion groups
Tram operations and impact on bicycle use
Tram Operations Exceeding Ridership Projections Projected: 1500-3000 per day Actual: 4000+ per day OHSU employee usage nearly double projected ridership Public ridership Approx 15% of total ridership 1 Million Riders total since January 2007 opening
Results Overwhelmed with Bikes! 200-300 bikes parked at the tram lower station and nearby lockers
Results OHSU Bike Commute Challenge Participation increased 257 % 2006-156 Participants 2007-402 Participants Over 200-300 bikes per day are brought on the Tram cabins daily
Results 75 Additional bike racks installed- Full Additional covered bike parking facility planned
Results Bicycle Counts Bicycle counts in South Waterfront increased 135% since the Tram s Opening Other bike route to OHSU (Sixth and Sheridan) declined 44% Conclusion: Some existing cyclists are re-routing to avoid the 400 foot climb to the campus New cyclists are using Aerial Tram to access OHSU Campus 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 0 SW Terwilliger and Sheridan SW Moody and Gibbs 2006 2007
Results OHSU Center for Health and Healing- 1st Building in South Waterfront 400,000 Sq Ft of Medical Office + March Wellness Work Commute Survey 33% Transit 11% Walk/Bike 44% Total
Results $440 Million in Private Investment New 20 acre OHSU academic campus planned for district Hundreds of new housing units- Condo s and apartments
Conclusions Aerial Tram and other South Waterfront infrastructure investment was effective in influencing travel behavior and other lifestyle decisions Each new project removes barriers to change the overall picture of what each individual believes is possible- results multiply
Questions?